The Omega Code Movie Review
The Omega Code Review

"The Omega Code" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert MarcarelliProducer : Matthew Crouch,Robert Marcarelli,Lawrence Mortorff
Screenwiter : Stephan Blinn,Hollis Barton
Starring : Casper Van Dien,Michael York,Catherine Oxenberg,Michael Ironside
A prophetic code hidden within the Torah. A sinister plot sealed until the end
of the Age. Two men caught up in an ancient supernatural struggle to determine
the fate of the next millennium.
Hey it sounds like a pretty cool concept for a film, right? I mean, it’s the
classic good-versus-evil scenario mixed in with the whole “end of the
millennium” hype. It sounded like a good excuse to check it out.
However all the kings horses and all the kings men couldn’t make this
egg-sucking excuse for religious propaganda a good film any more than you could
turn a Yugo into a Daytona 500 contender by slapping a Goodyear sticker on the
fender.
The Omega Code, one of the first big-budget movies to come from multi-million
dollar religious network Trinity Broadcasting, is a poorly conceived attempt to
entertain the masses without the use of gratuitous sex, foul language, etc.
while secretly preaching the gospel to unsuspecting viewers.
Casper van Dien known for such epic films as Starship Troopers and Beastmaster
III: the Eyes of Braxus, plays Gillen Lane - a motivational guru who teams up
with billionaire humanitarian Stone Alexander (played by Michael York) to help
unite the world superpowers under the premise of global peace. However Lane
realizes that Alexander’s plans are less than humanitarian when it is
discovered that he plans to take over the world by exploiting information
extracted from the mysterious “bible code.” The bible code is real life
recently-discovered phenomenon of secret codes buried within the words of the
Hebrew Old Testament that gives a Nostradamus-like foretelling of global events
past, present and future.
The premise of the story is good, but the execution of that story leaves a lot
to be desired. The writing is terrible – there is no rhyme or reason as to how
things progress, unless of course you happen to know the books of David and
Revelation by heart. The acting is overdone – Van Dien's melodramatic, teeth
gritting dialogs are downright comical to watch. And through the whole film, I
couldn’t escape painful feeling like I was being preached to for two hours.
See, most fundamentalist Christians feel that Hollywood over-glorifies evil
concepts too often and stories about the word of God are ignored. Well, in my
opinion there is a reason for that: No one wants to watch or sit through a two
hour sermon! We all know that sex sells. Violence Sells. Evil Sells.
Religion…is something that was most-likely forced upon most of us unsuspecting
folks back when we were too naïve to think for ourselves. And because of that,
no one wants to have that happen to them again.
But the real problem with this film is not the fact that Trinity Broadcasting
is trying to win back people in the war with the devil. The real problem is
that this movie is a lot like Christian rock music: It’s not so much the
message they’re putting out, it’s just that the delivery of the message sucks.
My opinion, either get paid to watch the movie in the theater, or wait for it
to be broadcast over cable TV. It’s not worth any other effort.
Code ranger.
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Review by Robert Marley
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